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  • How Two Alexandria Brothers Transformed an Abandoned Data Center into an Indoor Farm
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How Two Alexandria Brothers Transformed an Abandoned Data Center into an Indoor Farm

Beanstalk is expected to sprout quickly with its innovative technology.

By Jill S. Devine January 4, 2023 at 10:22 am

A farm replacing a data center in Northern Virginia — is that even possible? This reversal of development trends happened in September, when Beanstalk Farms, the brainchild of Alexandria brothers Mike and Jack Ross, opened at what was an abandoned data center in downtown Herndon.

Beanstalk is no ordinary farm. Named after the “Jack and the Beanstalk” fairy tale the siblings’ mother read to them as children, it uses a new method of high-density, highly automated indoor agriculture that yields hyper-fresh, nutritious produce that can be delivered within 24 hours of harvest.

As an indoor vertical farm, Beanstalk grows crops in rows of shallow trays to allow for more efficient use of the facility’s dimensions. To do so, the brothers use a system they designed known as a “growing tower.” The nine-level, 100-foot-wide, 24-foot-deep apparatus, which CEO Mike Ross calls “the world’s largest vending machine,” operates vertically and horizontally to lower plants from the stacked shelves for workers to harvest, package, and deliver. The farm currently operates one tower, but they plan to add two more.

beanstalk farm shelves
Photo courtesy Michael Ross

The elder Ross, 31, says the operation is 200 times more productive than traditional farms. Beanstalk can grow more than 100 acres worth of produce on just a half-acre of land while using 90 percent less water.

The idea did not sprout overnight. The brothers trace the roots of Beanstalk Farms to 2017, when Jack, now 28, was an undergraduate student at the University of Virginia. There, he was awarded a $5,000 grant that afforded the duo the materials to build their first growing tower prototype. By 2018, they were opening a 3,000-square-foot farm in Springfield, which closed when they moved to Herndon.

The Ross brothers are now hoping to see their growing method employed elsewhere.

“Nutritious, fresh produce is hard to find, so we eventually want to take our show on the road,” Mike Ross says. It’s an endeavor that will be enhanced by their emphasis on sustainability. Because Beanstalk is an indoor farm, it does not rely on changing seasons and uses no pesticides or chemicals, Ross says. Beanstalk also uses clean, tested tap water, which is recycled along with composted plant waste and soil.

“It’s a completely closed-loop system that results in Beanstalk producing zero waste and being carbon-neutral,” Mike Ross says.

“Beanstalk Farms represents a return of sorts to Herndon’s agricultural roots, but with a technological twist,” said Herndon Mayor Sheila Olem at the farm’s opening.

Also in attendance at the opening ceremony was Gov. Glenn Youngkin, who credited the duo with helping “Virginia become the leader in sustainable vertical farms.”

“Here we see a company that is, in fact, growing like a beanstalk,” Youngkin added.

This story originally ran in our January issue. For more stories like this, subscribe to our monthly magazine.

Jill S. Devine

Jill S. Devine

Contributing Writer

Jill Devine is a freelance writer who has lived in Northern Virginia most of her life. She previously was a staff writer for a local newspaper and then managing editor for a large association magazine. Her articles have also appeared in Virginia Living, Blue Ridge Country, and Ashburn magazines. She majored in English at the University of Mary Washington. Since 2021, Jill’s writing has earned 12 Virginia Press Association awards.

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